Batraz


Batraz, Batradz, or Pataraz is a central character in the North Caucasian myths known as the Nart sagas. The Narts were the central figures of the folklore of peoples of the North Caucasus.

Myth

Batraz in the Ossetian Nart sagas is son of Khamis. Khamis was married to a sea-nymph or water-sprite, in Ossetian variants a daughter of the Ossetian sea-god Donbettyr and in Circassian versions the frog-like Lady Isp. Whilst at a meeting of the Narts the Nart Syrdon ridiculed Khamis's wife, who had taken the form of a frog which he put in his pocket. As a result, Khamis's wife left, but before going she breathed the embryo of her son upon her husband's back, creating a type of womb-like cyst from which Batraz is later delivered, glowing hot.
After being born from his father's back, still on fire, Syrdon throws Batraz into the sea, where he dwells during his childhood. Batraz gained his powers by visiting the god-blacksmith Kurdalægonthe smith heats Batraz to white heat, then using tongs, throws him into the sea. From then on Batraz's great feats begin – he lives in the sky and is able to summon lightning bolts to aid the Narts. In one variant Batraz demands a huge amount of charcoal from the Narts, then with two dozen bellows the charcoal is heated, and Batraz is heated to white hot, he then jumps into the sea, and next kills many Narts. In a variant of this mythic motif Batraz becomes so hot - in order to avenge his father's death at the hands of certain other Narts - that he plunges, burning, through successive floors of a tower into a cauldron placed beneath it by Syrdon, and then goes on to kill the guilty Narts in revenge.
His feats include wreaking vengeance on a 'crooked giant' in retribution for violence against the young people of the Narts; and also upon Sainag-Aldar, the killer of his father Xamyc.
Batraz also appears in tales in which the Narts compete for a prize by boasting – often he is the winner in the boasting games.
Ultimately it is vengeance for his father that leads to his death - his father had a magic tooth than when shown allowed him to sleep with any woman of the Narts - his use of this led to Xamyc being killed in an ambush by other Narts who sought revenge for this. However Batraz takes revenge, and he starts killing and persecuting other Narts in cruel ways, then he begins to blame the heavenly spirits for his father's death. Eventually god has to intervene and put Batraz to death.

Batraz's sword

One aspect of Batraz's aspect is his representation of iron. Often is the tales his physical presence itself is used as a weapon, such as him smashing through the walls of a fortress. The tales where his hot self is plunged into water have been taken as a reference to the quenching of steel to make it harder.
In other aspects of his myth it is his sword that creates lightning, produced when it is swung to dispel evil spirits. In one version of the legend Batraz could only die when his sword was thrown into the Black Sea.

Ossetian aspects

Most of the stories of Batraz were collected in Ossetia.
According to legend the three main sanctuaries of Ossetia - Реком, Таранджелоз and Мыкалгабырта - were formed by the three tears wept by God upon the death of Batraz.
Additionally the Ossetians associated Batraz's name with thunderstorms in some local folklore. However, since Christianization, as a storm god he contends with the Christian figures of 'St. Wacilla'.

Etymology

Russian linguist and historian Nikolai Trubetzkoy proposed that the name Batraz was borrowed into Ossetic via a Kabardian source, as the phonology is impossible for a native Ossetic name. Trubetsky proposed that the name was borrowed by the Kabardians from an earlier, non-Ossetic, Iranian people who once lived in the region, and reconstructs the Old Iranian form as *Pitari-za, meaning "given birth to by the father".

Comparative mythology

As a 'god' who contends against the other gods Batraz takes a similar role as the Armenian Artavazd, and the Georgian Amirani. He has also been identified as corresponding to Prometheus in Greek Myth.
Dumézil also sees parallels between Batraz's unusual birth, and the Indian deity Indra.
He is sometimes seen as a possible precursor to King Arthur.

In popular culture